Birdcage Scaffold Design: Standards, Ledgers, Transoms and Load Considerations for Internal Scaffolding

Quick Answer: A birdcage scaffold is a freestanding internal structure of standards and ledgers supporting a working platform, used where access to ceilings or high internal surfaces is required. Under TG20:21, birdcage scaffolds are limited to 8m height and 2.4m span between standards. Load checks are critical — the birdcage is self-standing with no ties to walls, so foundation loading and platform capacity must be verified for the floor below.

Summary

Birdcage scaffolding is used where work needs to be carried out on ceilings, high walls, or internal structures — churches, large hall renovations, industrial buildings, warehouse fit-outs. Unlike a facade scaffold, a birdcage has no building wall to tie to; it is a freestanding three-dimensional grid that relies entirely on its own geometry and the floor below it for stability.

The name comes from the appearance: a grid of standards at regular intervals across the floor area, connected by ledgers in two horizontal directions, with a single working platform across the top. The grid of standards resembles a large cage.

Birdcage design requires more thought than a standard facade scaffold. The self-standing nature means the designer must consider: the stability of the structure under wind (if openings or roof voids allow air movement), the concentrated floor loading from the base plates, floor bearing capacity, and the platform loading for the trades working on top.

TG20:21 covers standard birdcage configurations within defined limits. Complex or large birdcages, or those on structurally sensitive floors, will require an engineer's assessment.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table: TG20 Birdcage Standard Limits

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Parameter TG20 Standard Limit
Maximum height 8m
Maximum bay span 2.4m (each direction)
Duty class Class 1–3 (check eSP for Class 4+)
Platform boards 38mm BS 2482 scaffold boards
Maximum board span 1.5m (close boarded); 1.2m recommended
Sole plate minimum 225mm × 38mm timber
Floor bearing required Structural assessment if suspended floor

Detailed Guidance

Birdcage Grid Layout

A birdcage is laid out on a grid. Standards are positioned at intersections of a rectangular plan grid; the grid spacing is the bay size (maximum 2.4m per TG20). The grid should be:

For a typical church ceiling repair birdcage (say, 12m × 8m floor area, 7m working height):

Floor Loading Calculations

This is the most overlooked aspect of birdcage design. The standards transfer concentrated loads to the floor via sole plates. The loads include:

A single standard under full Class 3 load can carry 10–15 kN concentrated on a single base plate (150mm × 150mm). This concentrated pressure may exceed the bearing capacity of:

Rule of thumb: Always assess the floor before erecting a birdcage inside a building. For older buildings, obtain structural drawings or commission a brief structural assessment. Never assume a floor can take the load without checking.

Mitigation options where floor loading is a concern:

Stability Without Ties

Facade scaffolds resist horizontal (lateral) forces via ties to the building. Birdcages have no ties. Stability comes from:

For heights approaching the TG20 limit of 8m, the structure becomes slender and bracing is essential. TG20 Appendix guidance specifies minimum bracing for birdcages. In practice:

Platform and Guardrail Requirements

The working platform at the top of a birdcage must:

Because the birdcage is internal, wind loading on the platform itself is usually low. However, if the building has open roof lanterns, large openings, or is an open-sided structure, wind loads should be assessed.

Access to the Working Platform

Standard access options:

For work at heights above 4m, stair access is strongly recommended. Repeated ladder climbing with tools and materials is a significant manual handling and fall risk.

Inspection of Birdcage Scaffolds

Inspection requirements are the same as all scaffolds under WAH Regs:

Specific inspection checks for birdcages:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a birdcage scaffold be used on a suspended timber floor?

Yes, but with care. A structural assessment of the floor is strongly recommended before erecting a birdcage on any suspended timber floor, particularly in older buildings. Spread loads with oversize sole plates or spreader beams beneath joists. Avoid placing standards over mid-span of joists; align with joist supports where possible.

Does TG20:21 have a specific birdcage section?

Yes. TG20:21 includes a section on birdcage scaffolds with configuration tables and guidance on maximum heights, bay widths, and bracing requirements. The eSP tool may have limited birdcage functionality for certain configurations; for anything beyond the tables in TG20, seek an engineer's design.

What is the maximum height for a birdcage without an engineer's design?

Under TG20:21 standard guidance, 8m. Beyond 8m, the scaffold moves outside TG20 scope and requires a structural engineer's design. In practice, very high internal birdcages (e.g., 15m for a cathedral nave) are significant engineering exercises and will involve specific structural design with analysis of floor loading, stability under dynamic loads, and wind effects through any roof openings.

Can the standards rest directly on finished floors?

Standards must rest on base plates, and base plates must rest on sole plates. Sole plates distribute the concentrated load from the base plate over a larger floor area. Resting base plates directly on finished tiles, polished concrete, or screed may cause damage AND does not adequately spread the load. Use timber sole plates as minimum; rubber pad under sole plate where surface protection is required.

Regulations & Standards